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Pages in category "Cinemas and movie theaters in Cuyahoga County, Ohio" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The theater wanted to keep its prices low and show first run movies for their low price of 5 cents to please their Athens customers. The theater wasn't without its problems though. People of Ohio weren't ready for some of the more risqué movies. In Ohio, “The Birth of a Nation” was not allowed to be shown. It took the Ohio Board of Censors ...
Cinemas and movie theaters in Cuyahoga County, Ohio (8 P) Pages in category "Cinemas and movie theaters in Ohio" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total.
You can find a little touch of Hollywood in Ohio. In recent years, movie productions have been coming to the Buckeye State for a combination of factors – the architecture, the locations, but ...
Akron Civic Theatre [2] Little Theatre Off Broadway [1] Majestic Theatre [1] Midland Theatre [1] Playhouse Square Center [1] Allen Theatre; Hanna Theater; Ohio Theater; Palace Theater; State Theater; Benjamin and Marian Schuster Performing Arts Center; Living Word Outdoor Drama [1] Covedale Center for the Performing Arts [1] Victoria Theatre [3 ...
It was the first motion picture theater in Ohio to show a talking motion picture. [3] The opening night film, and first talky played in Ohio was a pre-release of Paramount’s "Something Always Happens" starring Neil Hamilton and Esther Ralston. Today it serves as a community Civic Center, movie theatre, meeting place and entertainment facility ...
The Renaissance Theatre, previously known as the Ohio Theatre, is a restored movie palace-type theater located at 138 Park Ave. W in Mansfield, Ohio. The 1,402-seat theater opened on January 18, 1928, as the Ohio Theatre and serves today as the largest performing arts center in North-Central Ohio.
Designed by architect George Rapp of Chicago, the Palace was the last theater built in Cincinnati before movies gained the prominence that they now enjoy.Built by the Ohio Construction Company at a cost of half a million dollars, the theater originally showed primarily vaudeville acts, but by the time RKO Pictures purchased it in 1930, it had been renovated to facilitate the showing of movies.